Campaign India Team
Apr 18, 2020

Battle of the Brands: Big Basket Vs Grofers

A weekly round up of the action in the social media space by Talkwalker

Battle of the Brands: Big Basket Vs Grofers
Times have changed – and how! Gone are the days when going to the market to get groceries was a mundane, everyday thing. Now it’s about going as less as possible, giving a wide berth to anyone without a mask and ticking items off your list and coming home as soon as possible. Amidst this surreal situation, some brands have really gone all out to make life easier for us – Grofers and BigBasket are two players which have, against all odds been making efforts to deliver groceries and continue business as usual at this time. Let’s take a closer look at what the internet is saying about these two.
 
Talkwalker, a social media analytics company, based in Luxembourg, takes a closer look at the buzz, using their platform. Talkwalker Analytics analyses the performance of mentions all over the internet and provides key metrics such as engagement, related themes, demographic data, geographic data and influencer data. 
 
Mentions:
 
Grofers in purple and BigBasket in green both have a similar trend since the beginning of the year – they have a huge peak in mid March – which corresponds to the beginning of the lockdown in India. While most other businesses are slowing down, Grofers and BigBasket have been the talk of the town last month since they provide services that are absolutely essential right now. The peak for both brands correspond to March 23rd, when both companies stated that they had trouble keeping up delivery services since their agents had been stopped by police while on their delivery runs. This situation was rectified on March 25th when they were gradually allowed to resume services. A second peak in early April is with regard to the fact that both services are running with limited staff and is an appeal to people to order smart and be patient in the face of logistical hurdles.
 
 
Demographics:
 
We had a look at the buzz, now let’s look at who is causing the buzz. Both brands have a similar profile in terms of demographics. For Grofers, 80.1% of the buzz comes from males and the rest from females and for BigBasket, it’s 76.2% from males and the rest from females. Both brands also have a very similar profile for age groups with the millennials leading the conversation, followed by Gen Z. Both brands also have almost the same percentage of chatter from the 35-44 age group.
 
 
Source:
Campaign India

Related Articles

Just Published

1 hour ago

CTV’s growing pains: Big spend, bigger blind spots

As connected TV becomes a media mainstay, marketers face a sharp paradox—rising ROI hopes, but murky metrics and mounting fraud risks.

1 hour ago

LinkedIn’s BrandLink bets on resonance over reach

Video may be B2B’s new darling, but LinkedIn’s BrandLink is selling context, not cheap clicks—marketers and publishers take note.

2 days ago

India’s six-pack makes Cannes Lions shortlist jury cut

This year’s Shortlisting Jury panel includes industry expert representations from 79 country-markets across various categories.

2 days ago

Google AI Max and SEO: What it means for brands and ...

Google’s AI Max for Search signals a shift in how information is found, used, and expected to perform—and is raising new challenges for marketers and brands alike.